
Ray of Hope #312: All Saints Day


“Making a choice – like all the saints – to preserve purity, even at the cost of one’s life!”
(Based on the Solemnity of All Saints)
The forests of northern Europe and Asia are home to a little animal called the Ermine.
It is characterized by its snow-white fur
(Some countries have the state robes of the judges lined with this fur…
… the white fur being a symbol of honour and purity.)
The Ermine would do anything to protect and safeguard its fur.
Fur hunters however, take undue advantage of this weakness of the Ermine.
They don’t keep a snare to catch the ermine
Instead the smear filth on the entrance and the interior of its house – usually in a cleft of a rock, or the hollow of a tree.
Dogs are then left behind the ermine…
… Frightened, the ermine runs towards its home, the only place of refuge.
However, it finds the entrance dirty and unclean.
It is unwilling to spoil the pure white fur coat.
And so, the ermine makes a choice…
To give in to the hungry and fierce dogs…
… than to spoil the purity of the white fur!
A choice is made – to preserve purity, even at the cost of one’s life!
Every Christian is expected to do the same…
… preserve the purity of one’s holiness, even at the cost of one’s life.
Today – on the Solemnity of the All-Saints – the Church invites us today to lift our gaze to heaven…
… and thank and praise God for the innumerable people who preserved purity, at the cost of their life!
On this Solemnity of All Saints, we celebrate and thank the Lord, for the perseverance in their faith…
… and the manner in which all Holy Men and Women of God, built up Christ’s Kingdom in the world.
Saints are not superheroes in the worldly sense…
What sets them apart…
… is not their miraculous power
… is not their popularity and fame.
Rather, what makes them saints, is their faith and their discipleship and their service to others.
The word – SAINT – sometimes strikes an odd chord in our minds…
Saints are often considered to be people…
… beyond our reach and too holy for our lives
… for whom the path to sanctity was made easy and cosy
… who are given a special boon from God to live a holy life
But the truth perhaps, is quite contrary…
Saints are people…
… who are truly very close to us and lived in simple and ordinary life situations like us.
… who had to struggle through many hardships and trials in the path to holiness.
… who co-operated with the grace of God and remained faithful to their commitment and call
Every Christian is called to a life of Holiness and to be a Saint…
How is this possible in our lives…?
The Beatitudes proclaimed by Jesus, in the Gospel shows us the path… (Mt 5: 1-10)
Being a saint…
… by depending on God in all dimensions of our life and seeking His Kingdom above all
… by mourning over our sins and seeking to live a life in repentance.
… by living a life of firm gentleness and trusting patience in the midst of injustice and pain
… by becoming agents of justice and seekers of establishing truth
… by offering mercy to the needy and even to those who we feel, don’t deserve
… by preserving purity in our thoughts, words and deeds
… by striving for establishing peace and harmony even in conflicting situations
… by accepting suffering and becoming stronger in our struggle to establish God’s Kingdom
This Feast day is a chance for us to sneak into the personal diary of the saints…
… and to “steal” some tips for us to admire and imitate them…
The Saints’ Favourite Food: The Holy Eucharist
The Saints’ Favourite Dress: The Armour of Faith
The Saints’ Favourite Pastime: Doing anything with immense Love of God
The Saints’ Favourite Symbol: The Holy Cross
The Saints’ Favourite Moments: Every time they discovered more the depth of God’s Love
The Church has a marvellous number of saints who are canonized.
On this special day, we also take our time, to raise our hearts in gratitude, for the many other holy men and women, who sparkle with sanctity, but have not been officially declared so.
A few may be known to us, in our family or friends circle…
Most of them, will remain unknown and unfamiliar and unheard.
But in the Lord’s presence, they dazzle and shine, in holiness and purity.
This galaxy of Saints beckon and encourage each one of us today to tread this path of holiness.
As St Augustine says:
“Do you aspire to do great things?
Begin with the little ones”
… Doing our simple works with much love of God.
… Living our Christian life with much faithfulness
… Seeing the deep presence of God in all areas of our life.
Let us live a life…
… of self-sacrifice, renunciation and trust in God
… seeking to do God’s will at all times
… laced with the tender Love of God in all our activities.
Like the ermine, in the world, we are faced to make a choice…
To die to the hungry and fierce world…
… than to spoil the purity of holiness!
Yes, we need to make a choice – constantly, at every moment…
A choice to preserve purity, even at the cost of one’s life!
Today, all the saints in heaven, with a loud chorus invite each one of us:
“Come, dear Child… Be a Saint!
Do not be afraid! We are with you!”
What is our response?
Happy Feast to all the Saints in Heaven… the Church Triumphant!
Happy Feast to all the faithful departed, being purged to be saints… the Church Suffering!
Happy Feast to all of us, striving to be saints, here on earth… the Church Militant!
God Bless! Live Jesus!
📖 Discovering the beauty of the Catholic Church through the Catechism
MAN’S VOCATION LIFE IN THE SPIRIT – GOD’S SALVATION: LAW AND GRACE – The Sixth Commandment – You shall not commit adultery – Male and Female He created them
Man’s dignity therefore requires him to act out of conscious and free choice, as moved and drawn in a personal way from within…
… and not by blind impulses in himself or by mere external constraint.
Man gains such dignity when, ridding himself of all slavery to the passions, he presses forward to his goal by freely choosing what is good…… and, by his diligence and skill, effectively secures for himself the means suited to this end.” (CCC # 2339)

“Receiving the touch of the Lord, in order to be safe from being drowned, in the troubled waters of life!”
(Based on Rom 9:1-5 and Lk 14:1-6 – Friday of the 30th Week in Ordinary Time, Year 1)
For our reflection today, we shall make a verse-by-verse analysis of the Gospel Passage…
The passage under consideration is the Healing of the man with dropsy on the Sabbath Day.
Let us carefully reflect on this amazingly dramatic incident…
The passage begins with the statement, “On a Sabbath, Jesus went to dine at the home of one of the leading Pharisees…” (Lk 14:1a)
Here was an invitation of a high and elite nature…
A leading Pharisee of the Jewish society had called Jesus to his home.
He was joined by many other scholars of the Law and the Pharisees.
Maybe it was a show of one’s status and pride and dignity as a great Pharisee…
Maybe it was another chance for the critics of Jesus to find something to crib about him…
“…and the people there were observing Him carefully…” (Lk 14:1b)
To be invited for a dinner was something nice and pleasant…
But to be invited to become an object of observation and scanning was bad enough.
“The people were observing Him carefully” suggested a suspicious action…
It was as if, some thieves were waiting eagerly to strike on their target…
It was as if, some fierce lions, were stealthily preparing to pounce upon their prey…
And then comes the bait “In front of him, there was a man suffering from dropsy” (Lk 14:2)
What’s dropsy?
Dropsy was a condition in which there was an unnatural collection of serous (pale yellow and transparent) fluid in any cavity of the body.
Dropsy was water retention in the body.
Dropsy itself was not a disease, but a symptom of a disease.
It could be a number of things – complications of the liver or kidney or the heart or all three!
In the Jewish understanding, someone who had this condition of dropsy, was seen as a great sinner, even related to being a sexual sinner.
This sickness was a pointer to the man’s condition of being highly unclean!
But to bring back our attention to the Gospel…
Was this not the setting of a dinner?
Was not Jesus called for a meal…
… and that too, a dinner with the elite and leading religious people…
… and that too, on a Sabbath day?!
Then what was a man with dropsy, a serious condition of uncleanness, doing there?
The plot of the drama seems to be thickening…
The setup seems to be getting clear…
The Pharisees have invited Jesus for a meal, yes…
… but probably with a hidden and a mean agenda:
Drop a man with dropsy in front of Jesus… and observe what he does!
They knew Jesus had the power to heal…
… but they also knew that it would lead to violation of the Sabbath!
They knew Jesus would feel compassion on the man…
… but they also knew that it would give them a chance to go up in arms!
They wanted Jesus to violate the Sabbath to give proof that He was not from God!
The Rabbinical rule was that one could only be doctored if one was going to die immediately on the Sabbath.
But if death is not imminent, wait till the Sabbath is over.
But Jesus had time and again proved, that he had no regard for that lack of compassion or for the folly of that legalism.
In Lk 6:6-11, Jesus healed a withered man, on the Sabbath…
In Lk 13: 10-17, Jesus healed a woman, crippled for eighteen years, on the Sabbath…
So, He asks the guests gathered around, “Is it lawful to cure on the Sabbath or not?” (Lk 14:3)
Jesus knew their answer.
Jesus knew their perspective of things.
Yet He wanted them to tell.
“… but they kept silent” (Lk 14:4a)…
They knew the answer too.
They knew it was unlawful.
Still they did not tell Him.
Sheer hypocrisy!
Absolute malicious trapping!
And then Jesus does something astonishing…
“… he took the man, and after he had healed him, dismissed him” (Lk 14:4b)
The Greek word used for “took” is a very very strong verb….”Epilambano”
“Epilambano” literally means to lay hold of or to seize upon anything with the hands
It is the same word used in…
… Lk 23:26, when the soldiers seized Simon of Cyrene to carry the cross
… Acts 16:19 to say that Paul and Silas were seized and dragged by their persecutors..)
The cruel silence of the crowd provokes Jesus, to strongly seize the afflicted man!
He doesn’t work the miracle in hiding or quietly or from a distance!
Rather, with much force, He just grabs the man, seizes him, crushes him in His arms…
… as if to squeeze the fluid out
… and give him a new heart, a new liver, and a new self and creates in the man a whole new set of internal organs.
And finally Jesus justifies His action with another thundering question, “Who among you, if your son or ox falls into a cistern, would not immediately pull him out on a Sabbath?” (Lk 14:6)
A beautiful picture indeed…
Jesus asks them, “None of you would have allowed your son or ox to drown in the waters, isn’t it?
Then why don’t you see, that I have also saved from drowning… this man with dropsy, drowning in his own fluid!?
Another total silence by the onlookers!
Am I also silent now?
There is much to learn from this dramatic incident, isn’t it?
May this dramatic Gospel incident, become…
… a wonderful inspiration, for us… who need the touch of the Lord, from being drowned in the troubled waters of life!
… a hard warning, for us… who malign other’s lives by seeking to find ways and means to trap them in the works of goodness!
… a tremendous booster, for us… who often get bogged down by troubles of life & instead to be bold to the hard & gritty challenges of life!
On this last day of October – the month of the Rosary – let us thank the Lord for the gift of our Blessed Mother…
And pray the Rosary, everyday – which is a journey through the Life of Jesus, holding the Hands of our Mamma.
God Bless! Live Jesus!
📖 Discovering the beauty of the Catholic Church through the Catechism
MAN’S VOCATION LIFE IN THE SPIRIT – GOD’S SALVATION: LAW AND GRACE – The Sixth Commandment – You shall not commit adultery – Male and Female He created them
Chastity includes an apprenticeship in self-mastery which is a training in human freedom.
The alternative is clear: either man governs his passions and finds peace…… or he lets himself be dominated by them and becomes unhappy. (CCC # 2339)

“Finding rest, shelter and protection under the wings of the Mother Hen!”
(Based on Rom 8:31b-39 and Lk 13:31-35 – Thursday of the 30th Week in Ordinary Time, Year 1)
As children, we have often heard short stories…
One of the famous stories we have heard is about the Fox and the Hen.
The Fox tries his level best to kill the hen and it almost succeeds, until, the hen, by its cleverness, escapes through the clutches of the fox!
The fox is described with dominative and oppressive characters.
The hen is described with a defenseless and subjugated character.
Yet, the hen with its cleverness and adeptness manages to escape through its grasp.
The Gospel of the day presents such similar images of the Hen and the Fox to deliver a powerful message for our spiritual lives.
The passage begins with some Pharisees giving a warning to Jesus to leave that place since Herod wanted to kill Him.
Firstly, we encounter an unusual image of the Pharisees…
Usually, they are a group who present a very opposing and critical attitude.
The thought of a Pharisee, usually, brings an image of people who are knowledgeable, yet judgemental and disapproving in their behaviour.
But here is a welcome distinction…
These Pharisees display a concern towards Jesus and warn Him of the dangers posed by King Herod.
Why did these Pharisees do so ?
… In malice, to further trap Jesus?
… In jealousy, to keep Jesus away from the crowds?
… In concern, to help in His mission?
We can’t say for sure.
We can’t ascertain what really was their motive behind warning Jesus.
But it does allows us space to think that all people cannot be judged as wrong all the time!
Atleast an inkling of goodness exists in all, even in the midst of thick evil!
The answer of the Lord to the warning is a strong one… “Go and tell that fox… !” (Lk 13:32)
The image of the fox appears… King Herod.
Why does Jesus call King Herod as a fox?
The fox was an unclean animal for a Jew.
More than the slyness of the animal, Jesus was perhaps referring more to its uncleanness.
Herod always had issues with respect to being a clean and credible Jew…
After the death of his father, King Herod the Great (the one who had killed the many innocent male children at the birth of Jesus)…
… this Herod Antipas had been put in power by Caesar Augustus, the Roman Emperor, in 4 BC.
History tells that in 17 AD, to honour his Roman rulers, he build a grand new capital city named Tiberius, after the current emperor…
… only to discover that it was built on top of an old Jewish cemetery.
No pious Jew ever entered it, and was occupied exclusively by the pagans.
Herod also had his moral issues…
He divorced his first wife, in order to marry Herodias, the wife of his brother, Philip.
John the Baptist had been a persistent critic of Herod for this dubious marriage.
Herod had John killed because he had promised his daughter anything she wanted if she danced for him…
… and John’s head on a platter is what she wanted.
True, that King Herod Antipas was a powerful man and a person of great influence.
… But Jesus, the King of Kings and the God of all, fears him not and calls him “a fox!”
When one is filled with the mighty Spirit of God, no earthly forces can cause fright or scare!
When one fully trusts in the strength of God, no worldly might can cause anxiety or dread!
When one is committed to one’s convictions and missions, no power can deter away from it!
This leads Jesus to give another image…
“Jerusalem, Jerusalem… how many times, I yearned to gather your children together as a hen gathers her brood under her wings…“
The image of a mother Hen appears… Jesus Christ
It is one of the most overtly feminine references to God in all of scripture.
Jesus will be the mother hen who stands between the chicks and those who mean to harm.
She has no pointed fangs or rippling muscles.
But all she has, is her willingness to shield her babies with her own body.
If the fox wants them, he will have to kill her first.
This is the image that Jesus for Himself… a Hen.
It lays bare God’s vulnerability.
Here is the contrast…
King Herod, presented as a Fox…powerful, rude, forceful.
Jesus, presented as a mother Hen… protective, sacrificial, shielding.
This mother Hen, Jesus, invites each of us, His chicks, to find shelter under His wings.
Am I willing to take shelter under the wings of Jesus, the mother Hen?
The Gospel has a sad note: When the mother hen tried to gather her chicks underneath her wings, “they were unwilling” (Lk 13:34b)
The chicks are unwilling to remain under the shade of the hen’s wings…
Maybe they wanted more freedom…
Maybe they just wanted to have their own way of living life…
Maybe they did not find the mother hen too exciting, whereas the active fox attracted them…
We too are sometimes so…
We fail to come under the shade of God’s wings
We become unwilling
The story of the fox and the hen continues…
Do I get attracted more to the energetic and tempting fox…
… or do I find rest, shelter and protection under the wings of the mother hen?
The choice is before us…
God Bless! Live Jesus!
📖 Discovering the beauty of the Catholic Church through the Catechism
MAN’S VOCATION LIFE IN THE SPIRIT – GOD’S SALVATION: LAW AND GRACE – The Sixth Commandment – You shall not commit adultery – Male and Female He created them
The chaste person maintains the integrity of the powers of life and love placed in him.
This integrity ensures the unity of the person; it is opposed to any behavior that would impair it. It tolerates neither a double life nor duplicity in speech. (CCC # 2338)

“Walking the narrow way, to which the Lord invites us!”
(Based on Rom 8:26-30 and Lk 13:22-30 – Wednesday of the 30th Week in Ordinary Time, Year 1)
Human beings are inquisitive and curious.
By nature, humans tend to seek to know many things.
One of the prime among all such seeking is the questions concerning the life after this life.
What will happen after I die?
Where will I go after my death?
Is there such thing called as a heaven or hell?
Will go really punish or will He lavish the license of heaven to all?
Such eschatological questions often disturb our minds & we become a bit perplexed over an uncertain future.
The Gospel of the Day presents such an eschatological question being posed to Jesus, “Lord, will only a few be saved?” (Lk 13:23)
Jesus, has a very unique way of dealing with questions and doubts.
When we scan through some of such incidents, wherein Jesus has been asked a question or a doubt, we often find that He either doesn’t give a straight answer or sometimes even doesn’t give any answer…
… A lawyer comes to Jesus and asks, “Who is my neighbour?” (Lk 10:29)
Jesus doesn’t give a direct answer; instead responds with the Parable of the Good Samaritan.
… Some people tell Jesus about the Galileans whose blood Pilate had mingled with the sacrifices, and expected Jesus to make some comments (Lk 13:1)
Jesus doesn’t explicit a clear teaching; instead responds with the Parable of the Barren Fig Tree.
In today’s Gospel incident too, Jesus is asked about how many will be saved.
But Jesus chooses to respond with the Illustration of the Narrow Door.
Why does Jesus do so?
Why does He not respond directly to such questions, and instead answer in some other form?
One of the tendencies among many believers, including perhaps some of us, is that…
…we tend to miss the actual point, in the process of discussion.
…we fail to grasp the actual thing needed, in the course of many doubts.
We wonder…
… about who all will be saved
… when this world will come to an end
… how many people will make to heaven or be cast to hell
These simple questions lead to complicated ones…
What about people who have never heard about God?
What about those souls in distant lands who never had a chance to know what is God?
These complicated questions further leads to some conclusions…
What kind of God sends people to hell?
If the God of the Bible is so, then I don’t
want to believe in Him!
I would better not believe in any God and rather live my life the way I want!
Well… this is the sad part!
It is not that questionings or doubts are bad…or not that they are not encouraged…
But sometimes, such interrogations make us to miss the main point.
We get so entangled with doubts of the future, that we fail to prepare for the future.
We get so busy asking about eternal life, that we fail to live a life worthy of it!
But Jesus brings home to point…
What is needed utmost is an upright life…
… in faith and in repentance.
What is most needed is to live a life pleasing to God…
… and in seeking to do His Will.
This is the narrow way.
To live a life of faith, amid challenges and crises, is hard!
To live in total repentance and brushing aside sin at every point of life, is hard!
To live a life in tune with God’s Will, even if it is demanding, is hard!
This is the narrow way, to which the Lord invites us.
Let us not get too much webbed in the questions and doubts…
… and lose focus of what’s most needed: Faith, Repentance and Doing His Will.
Let us seek for this grace!
God Bless! Live Jesus!
📖 Discovering the beauty of the Catholic Church through the Catechism
MAN’S VOCATION LIFE IN THE SPIRIT – GOD’S SALVATION: LAW AND GRACE – The Sixth Commandment – You shall not commit adultery – Male and Female He created them
Chastity means the successful integration of sexuality within the person and thus the inner unity of man in his bodily and spiritual being.
Sexuality, in which man’s belonging to the bodily and biological world is expressed, becomes personal and truly human…
… when it is integrated into the relationship of one person to another
… in the complete and lifelong mutual gift of a man and a woman.The virtue of chastity therefore involves the integrity of the person and the integrality of the gift. (CCC # 2337)

“Being impelled, like St Simon and St Jude, to love God and His people!”
(Based on the Feast of Saints Simon and Jude, Apostles)
A garden of flowers delights most people!
A garden consists of a variety of flowers, with varied colours, sizes, shapes.
Some flowers tend to capture our attention more…
… some escape the gaze of our eyes.
However, this in no way, reduces or increases their relevance and importance.
Each flower has its own specialty.
Each flower has its own attraction.
Jesus in His garden of ministry, chose twelve apostles.
Some apostles tend to capture our attention more…
… some escape the gaze of our eyes.
However, this in no way, reduces or increases their relevance and importance.
Each apostle has his own specialty
Each apostle has his own attraction.
Today Holy Mother the Church celebrates the feast of two apostles: St Jude and St Simon.
These are apostles, who in most probability escape the gaze of our eyes.
These two saints are often known as the “unknown apostles”.
Yet, they have their own greatness before God and their own importance to inspire us in our lives!
The scarcity of their appearance in the New Testament is so vivid that except in the list of the names of the apostles…
… the name of Simon never appears elsewhere whereas the name of Jude makes only a single appearance in the discourse of Jesus after the last supper (Jn 14: 22).
In the Gospel according to Matthew and Mark, the apostle Simon is given the title of a Canaanaean, while Luke mentions him as “Zealot”
This apostle Simon must have belonged to the Zealot Party.
The Zealot Party was a first-century political movement among Judean Jews who sought to overthrow the occupying Roman government.
According to the Jewish historian Josephus, four main Jewish groups existed at the time of Christ – the Pharisees, the Sadducees, the Essenes and the Zealots.
The Zealots were known for their aggression and violent behaviour.
They advocated that no one, but Yahweh alone should rule over Israel…
… and hence, obedience to the Roman government should be refused.
The selection of Simon, the Zealot as an Apostle, is a great insight into the workings of Jesus, in His Kingdom Ministry…
The Lord accepts us with our hard instincts.
The Lord takes into account our various mentalities and mindsets.
In His Divine Love, He squashes all such factors and patterns us into people fit for His Kingdom.
He doesn’t reject us in our over-zeal.
He doesn’t cast us away because of our impulses.
All that He expects is an openness to follow Him fully and allow ourselves to be moulded!
The Apostle Jude is given another title by St Matthew and St Mark: Thaddeus.
Thaddeus means “the courageous heart”
St Jude is one of the most popular saints in our world today, considering the fact that he is called as “The Miraculous Saint”.
St Jude is the one whose aid is often sought when all hope is lost, especially in grave illness and life-and-death situations.
There is a story that since his name is identical with Judas Iscariot, who had betrayed Jesus…
… St Jude would hardly be interceded too, except in the most desperate situations!
And hence, perhaps, he got identified as the Patron in Helpless Causes!
St Bridget of Sweden & St Bernard had visions from God asking each to accept St Jude as ‘Patron Saint of the Impossible’.
The Apostle Jude teaches us a few insights for our spiritual growth.
A. Like the name – Jude Thaddeus – we are invited too, to have a “heart full of courage”.
The Kingdom of God requires brave soldiers and people of immense valour.
The Lord needs followers who are imbued with the might of His Holy Spirit and who boldly proclaim the Gospel and witness its values by their lives.
No situation of discouragement or setbacks will hinder the march of a “Courageous Heart!”
B. St Jude, as the Patron of Desperate Cases, inspires us to have a deeper faith and trust in the Providence and Mercy of God.
The Lord is all-knowing.
He wills what is best for us.
However, in our human frailty, we often tend to lose our hope and become highly desperate.
But this Saint teaches to grow deeper in our faith & know that “behind every dark cloud is a silver lining of the sun…(Son!)!”
C. St Jude also teaches the powerful role of Intercessory Prayer.
We are all created in the Image and Likeness of God, and each of us have a bounden duty to the other…
… to take care, to love each other and to pray for one another.
When we pray for others and bring others to the presence of God, we help them in their difficulties and join with them in solidarity and compassion.
There are many hidden flowers in a garden.
Yet, each one has its own beauty and fragrance and value.
These two apostles – St Simon and St Jude – are fairly hidden in the Gospels, and yet we can learn and be inspired much by them.
May the life and intercession of these two hidden, yet Great Apostles of the Lord…
… impel us further, to love God and His people…
… and spread the Gospel of God to many more!
Happy Feast of the Apostles St Jude and St Simon.
God Bless! Live Jesus!
📖 Discovering the beauty of the Catholic Church through the Catechism
MAN’S VOCATION LIFE IN THE SPIRIT – GOD’S SALVATION: LAW AND GRACE – The Sixth Commandment – You shall not commit adultery – Male and Female He created them
Jesus came to restore creation to the purity of its origins.
In the Sermon on the Mount, he interprets God’s plan strictly: “You have heard that it was said, ‘You shall not commit adultery.’ But I say to you that every one who looks at a woman lustfully has already committed adultery with her in his heart.”
What God has joined together, let not man put asunder.The tradition of the Church has understood the sixth commandment as encompassing the whole of human sexuality. (CCC # 2336)